3 Members of Sudan Military Council Resign

Three members of the Sudanese Transitional Military
Council resigned on Wednesday.
Lieutenant-General Omar Zain al-Abideen who heads
the TMC’s political committee was one of the resigning members, the TMC said in
a statement. The two others were Lieutenant-General Jalal al-Deen al-Sheikh and
Lieutenant-General Al-Tayeb Babakr Ali Fadeel.
Their resignations are yet to be accepted, the
council said late on Wednesday.
The resignations came after the Sudanese
Professionals’ Association, the main protest organizer, called for a
million-strong march to take place on Thursday. One of the SPA’s demands was
that the three lieutenant-generals, Abideen, Fadeel and Sheikh, be dismissed
and tried over their alleged role in a crackdown that killed dozens of
protesters.
The SPA had planned to announce a transitional
civilian government during the rally, but Ahmed Rabie, a senior member of the
group, said it will delay the announcement and instead focus on forming
different committees to hold talks with the military.
Earlier on Wednesday evening, the opposition and the
TMC agreed to form a committee to resolve their disagreements, amid tensions
over how long it will take to move to civilian rule after the overthrow of
autocrat Omar al-Bashir.
“We are partners working together to bring Sudan to
safety,” TMC spokesman Shams El Din Kabbashi said on state TV following a
meeting with the umbrella group Forces of the Declaration of Freedom and
Change, which includes the SPA. The TMC had invited the opposition to the
talks, saying that “the doors of dialogue and negotiation are open.”
The opposition movement voiced a willingness to
participate in the talks.
“The Forces of the Declaration of Freedom and Change
decided to respond to the invitation and listen with an open mind to what the
president of the military council will propose, asserting that our desire is
the peaceful transfer to a transitional civilian authority that reflects the forces
of the revolution,” the SPA said in a statement.
The military council has said it is in talks with
all Sudan's political parties to name a prime minister and civilian government
to run the country for two years.
The TMC and the opposition had appeared on a
collision course in recent days over popular demands for democratization under
civilian government. The SPA had declared on Sunday it would suspend talks with
the military council.
While the opposition has insisted on a swift
handover of power to civilians, the TMC has said the process could take up to
two years. Bashir ruled for 30 years after taking power in a military coup in
1989.
The SPA has called for the formation of a
legislative council in which at least 40 percent of the members would be women.
It would draft laws and oversee a Cabinet of technocrats until a new
constitution is written.